Building a Godly Home, Vol. 1: A Holy Vision for Family Life
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For years, William Gouge’s Domestical Duties has stood as the foremost Puritan treatment of Christian family life. Yet due to its size and antiquated expression, it has become almost unknown among current generations of believers. To help revive the usefulness of this classic book, Scott Brown and Joel R. Beeke divided Gouge’s work into three manageable volumes, updated the language to modern standards, and have given it the title Building a Godly Home .
In the first volume, A Holy Vision for Family Life, we hear the voice of a wise and loving mentor, calling us to the old paths laid out for the family in the Bible. Here is Gouge’s helpful exposition of Ephesians 5:21–6:4, where he lays out the wife’s voluntary submission to her husband, the husband’s sacrificial love for his wife, the child’s obedient honoring of parents, and the parents’ nurturing leadership of their children. Reading it is like sitting down to coffee with a gentle grandfather and wise pastor. Come and allow your family to benefit from such wise counsel.
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Building a Godly Home, Vol. 1 - William Gouge
Building a Godly Home
VOLUME ONE:
A Holy Vision for Family Life
William Gouge
edited and modernized
by Scott Brown and Joel R. Beeke
REFORMATION HERITAGE BOOKS
Grand Rapids, Michigan
Building a Godly Home, Volume 1
© 2013 Reformation Heritage Books
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. Direct your requests to the publisher at the following address:
Reformation Heritage Books
2965 Leonard St. NE
Grand Rapids, MI 49525
616-977-0889 / Fax 616-285-3246
e-mail: orders@heritagebooks.org
website: www.heritagebooks.org
Printed in the United States of America
13 14 15 16 17 18/10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
ISBN 978-1-60178-227-4 (epub)
——————————
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Gouge, William, 1578-1653.
[Of domesticall duties]
Building a Godly home / William Gouge ; edited and modernized by Scott Brown and Joel R. Beeke.
pages cm
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-60178-226-7 (hardcover, v. 1 : alk. paper) 1. Christian ethics—Early works to 1800. 2. Families—Religious life—Early works to 1800. I. Brown, Scott. II. Beeke, Joel R., 1952- III. Title.
BJ1241.G6 2013
248.4’859—dc23
2013000372
——————————
For additional Reformed literature, request a free book list from Reformation Heritage Books at the above address.
Contents
Preface
Biographical Introduction
1 Serving Each Other in the Fear of the Lord
2 Particular Callings and the Wife’s Submission
3 Headship in Marriage and the Church
4 Husbands and the Love of Christ
5 Love That Purifies the Unclean
6 Redeemed for Glory
7 Marital Love and Self-Love
8 Christ’s Union with His Beloved Body
9 The Ancient Law and Unique Bond of Marriage
10 The Mystery and Practice of Marriage
11 The Child’s Duties to His Parents
12 The Parents’ Duty towards Their Children
Preface
Have you ever desired a seasoned friend, thoroughly grounded in Scripture, to help you troubleshoot a family problem? Then, just as you are hoping for someone to come alongside to help, it happens again. It might be an explosion of anger or a cold distance. Or perhaps it’s just a nagging sense of inadequacy. Sometimes it feels like there are invisible walls between you and the others in your home. You know that you’re not all that you should be toward your loved ones. You know you need to change. And yet, where to begin? Wouldn’t it be nice to sit down with someone older and wiser, someone you could trust, for some guidance on how to be a better husband, wife, father, mother, son, or daughter?
This book is just such an opportunity. In these pages, we hear the voice of a wise and loving mentor, calling us to the old paths laid out for the family in the Bible. Reading it is like sitting down to coffee with a gentle grandfather and wise pastor.
In this book, the first part of Building a Godly Home, you will find William Gouge’s brief but helpful exposition of Ephesians 5:21–6:4. He lays out the wife’s voluntary submission to her husband, the husband’s sacrificial love for his wife, the child’s obedient honoring of parents, and the parents’ nurturing leadership of their children.
Gouge brings us some of the most compelling language explaining the significance of family life. He writes: The family is a seminary of the church and commonwealth. It is as a beehive, in which is the stock, and out of which are sent many swarms of bees. In families all sorts of people are bred and brought up, and out of families they are lent into the church and commonwealth. The first beginning of mankind and of his increase was out of a family.
He has given us helpful categories by which we can understand the purpose of family life. He says the family is a little church…or at least a lively representation of these.
He notes, It is like a school where the first principles and grounds of government and subjection are learned, and by which men are fitted to greater matters in church or commonwealth.
In this volume, you will also find his Puritan understanding of authority and submission in the home. His simplicity and clarity on the authority of the head of the household and the submission of the wife are refreshing. He not only explains the details of how authority ought to function, but he also examines why God has ordered marriage that way. Gouge explains many nuances of the use of authority and submission in a home that are often missed in marriage. In a world that despises authority, Gouge sets us aright and proclaims just what kind of authority a husband is called to exert: The goodness of Christ is set down in these words, ‘and He is the Savior of the body.’ Every word almost has His emphasis. Even the conjunction ‘and’ shows that the goodness which Christ does for His church, He does because He is the head of it. O how happy a thing is it for the church that it has such a head! A head that does not tyrannize over it, nor trample it under foot, a head that does not pole, nor peel the church, but procures its peace and safety.
Also in this volume, Gouge gives brief instruction that he elaborates on in the volume on parents and children. He gives an overview of matters such as: the parents’ duty with children; provoking children; seeking the good of children; nurturing children; and discipline. He speaks with the voice of experience on the matter of discipline: Extremes on either side are dangerous and pernicious to parent and child. For remissness will make children careless of all duty to God and parent; rigor will make them desperate. But virtue and safety consists in the balance between both.
As Paul does, Gouge gives the majority of his attention to marriage as a living image of Christ’s love relationship with His church. Thus, you will discover that this book on marriage is full of the gospel of Jesus Christ. In the second and third books, published separately, Gouge enters into much more detailed application of these principles to practical situations. All in all, Building a Godly Home shows us that when the Word is the rule of our duty, duty becomes delight.
So come and listen to this spiritual patriarch. Let him answer your questions, encourage your heart, and guide you into biblical truth. God’s Word draws a lovely picture of what marriage and family can be even in our fallen world. By the transforming love of Christ, may this book enable you to make your family into a showcase for grace. When Christian families imitate Christ, then a skeptical world is confronted by the beauty of our God.
Biographical Introduction
William Gouge (1575–1653) was a godly husband and father to his family, and a spiritual father to many more. Born in England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, Gouge grew up in a godly home. He inherited a spiritual legacy and passed it on to future generations.
His father was a devout Christian. His mother was the sister of two preachers, Samuel and Ezekiel Culverwell. William benefitted especially from the preaching of his Uncle Ezekiel. Furthermore, one of his mother’s sisters married Laurence Chaderton, the patriarch of the Puritan movement at Cambridge. Another of his aunts married William Whitaker, the great Reformed defender of the clarity and sufficiency of the Holy Scriptures against the spiritual tyranny of the pope and the Roman Catholic Church.
As a young man, Gouge gave himself to his studies and to personal devotions. While at King’s College in Cambridge, he never missed morning prayers at 5:30 a.m., and consistently read fifteen chapters of the Bible every day. He mastered biblical studies, theology, logic, and philosophy, learning Hebrew from a rabbi who visited Cambridge. He became a preacher of the gospel, serving at Blackfriars Church in London from 1608 to his death in 1653. Though he received offers to move to more prominent churches, he stayed there. He said that he hoped to go straight from Blackfriars to heaven.
In his late twenties, he married Elizabeth Coulton, a God-fearing Christian woman. Together they had thirteen children, though only eight lived to maturity. Losing a third or more of one’s children was not unusual in the seventeenth century. Gouge led his household with great patience and kindness. He was quick to humble himself, and brokenhearted in his confessions of sin. He conducted family worship in his home, and made sure that all those in his household (including his servants) were free to rest on the Lord’s Day.
He poured out his life in gospel ministry. He preached twice on Sundays, and once more on Wednesday morning. On Sunday afternoons, he invited poor people to his home for dinner and to discuss the sermon with them. The Wednesday lecture drew large numbers of people, including other ministers and those visiting London on business. He also served prominently in the Westminster Assembly, helping to write the Westminster Confession of Faith.
He was chosen to write the commentaries in the Westminster Annotations on the Old Testament books from 1 Kings to Esther. He was an accomplished author, publishing treatises on John 5, the armor of God (Eph. 6:10–20), how to keep the Sabbath, the epistle to the Hebrews, and how to respond rightly to disasters such as the plague, famine, and war.
One of Gouge’s greatest writings was his book on family life. It opens with an exposition of Paul’s inspired instructions for household life in the epistle to the Ephesians. Then, with gracious and detailed applications, it explores the responsibilities of husbands, wives, children, parents, servants, and masters. Almost four centuries have passed since Gouge published Of Domesticall Duties (1622). In some ways, his language has become difficult for modern readers to understand. But his thoughts are vibrant, warm, and rich in biblical wisdom.
We are delighted to present to the reader a modernized version of this book, titled Building a Godly Home. We have rendered Gouge’s early modern English into twenty-first-century language, changing words and sometimes phrases. We have also omitted the sections on servants and masters because, though full of insight, they are not directly relevant to our lives in North America today. We have added footnotes to explain the meaning of certain words communicating important theological or historical ideas perhaps unfamiliar to many readers.
– 1 –
Serving Each Other in the Fear of the Lord
Submitting yourselves one to another in the fear of God.
—EPHESIANS 5:21
It has pleased God to call everyone to two vocations. One vocation is general, in which certain common duties are to be performed by all men (as knowledge, faith, obedience, repentance, love, mercy, justice, truth, etc.). The other is particular, in which certain specific duties are required of individual people, according to those distinct places where divine providence has set them in the nation, church, and family.
Therefore God’s ministers ought to be careful in instructing God’s people in both kinds of duties; both those which concern their general calling and those which concern their particular calling. Accordingly Paul, who, like Moses, was faithful in all the house of God (Num. 12:7), after he had sufficiently instructed God’s church in the general duties that belong to all Christians, regardless of sex, state, degree, or condition (Eph. 4:1–5:21), proceeds to lay down certain particular duties, which apply to particular callings and conditions (Eph. 5:22–6:9). Among these particular duties, he notes those which God has established in a family.
With excellent skill he passes from those general duties to the particular ones, laying down a transition between them with these words, Submitting your selves one to another in the fear of God
(Eph. 5:21). The form and manner of setting down this verse, with the participle submitting,
shows that it depends on that which was said before. Again, the fact that the word itself is the very same which is used in the following verse, shows that this verse contains the sum of that which follows, and connects the general to the particulars. This manner of passing from one point to another, by a perfect transition which looks both to that which is past and to that which is coming, is very elegant and frequently employed by our apostle.
Thereby he teaches us to pay attention to that which follows, while we do not forget that which is past. While we must give diligent attention to that which remains to be said, we must also retain that which we have heard, and not let it slip. Otherwise, if (as one nail drives out another) one precept makes another to be forgotten, it will be altogether in vain to add line to line, or precept to precept.
Joining Service to Men with Our Praising of God
As this verse refers to that which was delivered before (concerning our duty to God), it teaches us this lesson: it is the duty of Christians to set forth the praise of God (Eph. 5:19–20), in order to be serviceable one to another. Likewise, to the first table of the Ten Commandments, which prescribes that duty which we owe to God, is added the second table, which declares the service that we owe one to another. Jesus said, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: you shall love your neighbor as yourself
(Matt. 22:37–39). The apostle, declaring those sacrifices by which God is well-pleased, joins these two together, to give thanks to God, and to do good to man (Heb. 13:15–16). The service which we perform one to another in the fear of God is an evident and real demonstration of the respect we bear to God. Our goodness adds nothing to God (Ps. 16:2). He is so high above us, so perfect and complete in Himself, that neither can we give to Him, nor He receive of us (Job 22:3; 35:7). But in His own place He has placed our brother like us, to whom we may do harm (Job 35:8), or by our faithful service we may do much good (Ps. 16:3), which gives God much honor.
This shows the hypocrisy of those who make great pretense of praising God, and yet are scornful and disdainful to their brethren, and slothful to do any service to man. These people’s religion is vain (James 1:25–27). By this note did the prophets in their time, as did Christ and His apostles in their time, display the hypocrisy of those among whom they lived, and so may we also in our times. For many people, in their houses and in the midst of the congregation, frequently sing praise to God, and perform other parts of God’s outward worship, but towards one another are proud, stubborn, envious, unmerciful, unjust, slanderous, and very opposed to do any good service. Surely, that outward service which they pretend to perform to God does not wipe away the spot of profanity. How much more does their neglect of duty to man brand their foreheads with the stamp of hypocrisy (James 1:26–27; Isa. 58:3–12; Micah 6:6–12; Matt. 23:14; 1 John 4:20).
Let us not upon pretext of one duty, though it may seem to be the weightier, think to discard another, lest that fearful woe
which Christ denounced against the scribes and Pharisees (Matt. 23:23) fall upon our heads. As God is careful to instruct us how to act both towards His own majesty and also towards one another, so in both let us seek His approval. Remember what Christ said to the Pharisees, These ought ye to have done, and not to leave the other undone
(Luke 11:42). The same Lord that requires praise to His own majesty instructs us in mutual service one to another. What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder
(Matt. 19:6).
Everyone’s Submitting Himself to Another
Again, as this verse refers to that which follows, it declares the general sum of all, which is to submit ourselves mutually one to another in the fear of God. There are two parts to this verse, an exhortation and a direction.
The exhortation notes both the duty itself in this word submit,
and also the parties to whom it is to be performed, one to another.
Both branches of the exhortation, namely, the duty, and the parties joined together, bear this doctrine: It is a general mutual duty pertaining to all Christians, to submit themselves one to another. This precept is as general as any of the former, belonging to all sorts and degrees of people. So much does this phrase one another
imply that the apostle in another place exhorts to serve one another
(Gal. 5:13), and again, Let no man seek his own, but every man another’s wealth
(1 Cor. 10:24).
Concerning subordinates, it is clear beyond question that they ought to submit themselves to their superiors. Yet, even concerning equals no great question can be made, but they in giving honor must prefer one another (Rom. 12:10), and so submit themselves. However, concerning superiors, questions may be raised, whether it is a duty required of them to submit themselves to their subordinates.
To resolve this doubt, we must first distinguish between submission of respect, and submission of service. Submission of respect is that whereby one testifies of a high position and superiority in them whom he respects, by speech, by giving them a title of honor, or in gesture, by some kind of courteous behavior, or in action, by a quick obeying of their commands. This is proper to subordinates.
Submission of service is that whereby one in his place is ready to do what good he can for another. This is common to all Christians, a duty which even superiors owe to subordinates, according to the previously mentioned extent of this phrase one another.
In this respect, even the highest governor on earth is called a minister,
for the good of those that are under him.
Second, we must note a difference between the work itself and the manner of doing it. That work which in itself is a work of superiority and authority, in the manner of doing it may be a